Small-scale processes in desert locust swarm formation: how vegetation patterns influence gregarization
Authored by E Despland, SJ Simpson, M Collett
Date Published: 2000
DOI: 10.1034/j.1600-0706.2000.880322.x
Sponsors:
United Nations Development Fund
British Biological Sciences Research Council
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Desert locusts (Schistocerca gregaria) change phase in response to
population density: `solitarious' insects avoid one another, but when
crowded they shift to the gregarious phase and aggregate. This
individual-level process is the basis for population-level responses
that may ultimately include swarm formation. We have recently developed
an individual-based model of locust behavior in which contagious
resource distribution leads to phase change. This model shows how
population gregarization can result from simple processes operating at
the individual level. In the present study, we performed a series of
laboratory experiments in which vegetation pattern and locust phase
stale were assigned quantitative, measurable indices. The pattern of
distribution of the resource was represented via fractal dimension; the
phase slate was evaluated using a behavioral assay based on logistic
regression analysis. Locusts were exposed to different patterns of food
resource in an artificial arena, after which their behavioral phase
state was assayed. These experiments showed that when the distribution
of the vegetation was patchy, locusts were more active, experienced
higher levels of crowding, and became more gregarious. These results are
consistent with simulation predictions and held observations, and
demonstrate that small-scale vegetation distribution influences
individual behavior and phase state and plays a role in population-level
responses.
Tags
models
ecology
Schistocerca-gregaria
Behavioral phase state